Chinese province bans adults looking at youngsters' mobiles

Adults banned from searching children's computers or phones under a new law passed in Chongqing, southwest China

Chongqing state in south-western China has passed a law banning adults from looking through the computers or mobile phones of youngsters. Photograph: Graham Turner/Guardian Photograph: Graham Turner for the Guardian
Graham Turner/Guardian

It is a ruling that teenagers around the world will regard with a certain amount of envy. Parents in one Chinese city are to be prevented from snooping on their children's online activity and text messages.

Adults, including family members, are banned from searching through children's computers or phones under a new regional law passed in Chongqing, southwest China, state media reported today. The regulation outlaws snooping into their emails, text messages, web chats, and browser history. The regulation is designed to protect the rights of children, but is surprising given widespread concern in China about excessive internet use among young people and their access to unsuitable material. Psychologists have sought to have internet addiction listed as a clinical disorder and treatment camps have sprung up across the country. The Chongqing Evening Post described the new regulation, adopted on Friday by officials in Chongqing, as the first of its kind in the country. Other Chinese media said it expanded an existing national rule. But both experts and children doubted whether it would have an impact in practice.

Lu Yulin, a professor at the China Youth University of Political Science, told China Daily that children were unlikely to take their parents to court.

"Parents who habitually check such information won't stop due to the regulation," he said.

Eleven-year-old Song Jingbo, from Xi'an, told the newspaper he did not think his mother and father would be able to access his data anyway, adding: "I am far more internet savvy than them."

China has the largest population of internet users in the world and minors alone account for more 126 million of them, according to the China Internet Network Information Center.